Kiwi Steel Fined $237,500
MEDIA RELEASE
29 MAY 2011
Kiwi Steel
Fined $237,500 For Multiple Health And Safety
Breaches
One of New Zealand’s leading steel manufacturers has been fined nearly a quarter of a million dollars for repeated breaches of workplace health and safety legislation.
Kiwi Steel NZ Limited was fined $237,500 in the Manukau District Court for six separate health and safety offences.
Kiwi Steel NZ failed to report four separate accidents to the Department of Labour. The company was also fined on two charges of failing to adequately guard machines in the workplace. All told, two workers suffered de-gloving injuries to their fingers (which involves skin being stripped from the fingers), one worker had part of a finger amputated and one worker had his foot broken by a piece of falling steel.
The Judge said there was “no evidence of any effective preventative measures being put in place, at least until after the Department had become involved” following the most recent of the four accidents.
Kiwi Steel NZ was also ordered to pay a total of $16,500 in reparations to two of the injured employees. The Judge was “driven to the conclusion that the defendant adopted a laissez-faire attitude to health and safety issues.”
“Kiwi Steel NZ put its employees at risk, and failed to notify the Department of Labour about these workplace accidents,” says Department of Labour Acting Service Manager for Manukau, Jason Papuni.
“All employers are required by law to notify the Department about accidents at work. We found out about one of these breaches when an injured employee phoned our contact centre and also made enquiries with ACC,” says Mr Papuni.
Every year hundreds of people are injured while using machinery that is not adequately guarded.
“Employers have a duty to take all practicable steps to make sure that employees are able to go to work with the peace of mind that they won’t be injured while going about their daily duties,” says Mr Papuni.
The judge fined Kiwi Steel a total of $87,500 on the two charges of failing to adequately guard machines in the workplace. This means that in the last six months, the courts have levied fines of $455,012 on 13 companies (including Kiwi Steel) for machine guarding failures.
ENDS
Note to Editor
• Kiwi Steel NZ
Limited was convicted on two charges under Section 6 and
four charges under Section 25(3)(a) of the Health and Safety
in Employment Act 1992.
•
• The details of the
accidents are as follows:
•
In August 2006 an
employee suffered serious injuries to his right thumb, while
using a mini-slitter - a machine used to cut sheets of steel
into narrower strips,
In August 2007 an employee’s
foot was crushed by a sheet of steel.
In April 2009 an
employee’s finger on his right hand was amputated while he
was working on an industrial guillotine
In August 2009
an employee’s right hand got caught and dragged into the
unguarded cutting knives of a mini-slitter.
Section 6 of
the of the Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992 states:
Every employer shall take all practicable steps to ensure
the safety of employees while at work; and in particular
shall take all practicable steps to—
(a) provide and
maintain for employees a safe working environment;
and
(b) provide and maintain for employees while they are
at work facilities for their safety and health; and
(c)
ensure that plant used by any employee at work is so
arranged, designed, made, and maintained that it is safe for
the employee to use; and
(d) ensure that while at work
employees are not exposed to hazards arising out of the
arrangement, disposal, manipulation, organisation,
processing, storage, transport, working, or use of
things—
(i) in their place of work; or
(ii) near
their place of work and under the employer's control;
and
(e) develop procedures for dealing with emergencies
that may arise while employees are at work.
Section
25(3)(a) of the Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992
states: If there occurs any serious harm or accident to
which this subsection applies, the employer, self-employed
person, or principal concerned must,—
(a) as soon as
possible after the occurrence becomes known to the employer,
self-employed person, or principal, notify the Secretary of
the occurrence.
• The Health and Safety in Employment
Act 1992 is available online: http://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1992/0096/latest/DLM278829.html
•